Yes. Any noun or pronoun may be an indirect object.
Example:
During football season, he gave coaching his full attention.
(During football season, he gave his full attention to coaching.)
Joe struggles with reading and writing it, but he has a flair for speaking French.
Any noun can function as an indirect object. A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Example sentence for the noun 'president' as indirect object: The minister brought the president some bad news. (the direct object is 'news', the indirect object is 'president')
The same objective pronouns are used whether for the direct or indirect object. Example:She told me a story. The word "me" is an indirect object pronoun; the direct object is the noun story.
Fishing can either be a gerund phrase or a participial depending on how you use it in a sentence. For example, "Fishing is fun." is a sentence in which fishing is used as a gerund. To use fishing as a participial an example would be, "When I go camping I like to use my fishing gear." In the first sentence fishing is used as a noun and in the second fishing is used as an adjective. Gerunds are nouns with -ing and they can be subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, predicate nominatives, and object of a preposition.
It depends on how you use it, for example: "The bedroom is purple" The word bedroom is the subject. "He hit the bedroom" The word bedroom is the direct object. "We drink water in the bedroom" The word bedroom is the object of the preposition 'in'; 'in the bedroom.' is the indirect object of the verb.
The word suitcase is a noun and can be used as a direct object in a sentence. For example you could say: "Please give the suitcase to John." In that sentence "the suitcase" is the direct object and John is the indirect object.
Example sentence: I like swimming. (the gerund 'swimming' is the direct object of the verb 'like')
Gerunds can function as objects of prepositions. When a gerund is used after a preposition, it serves as the object of that preposition. For example, in the sentence "I am good at dancing," "dancing" is a gerund that functions as the object of the preposition "at."
Yes, a gerund is used an a noun, for example "They heard the crunching of ghouls loudly crushing skulls."; "crunching" is a gerund (object of the verb hear).
A gerund is a verb form ending in -ing that functions as a noun. When a gerund is used as the object of a preposition, it acts as a noun in the prepositional phrase. For example, in the sentence "I enjoy swimming," "swimming" is a gerund that serves as the object of the preposition "of." This construction allows the gerund to function as a noun while also expressing action.
It's unusual for a number to be used as an indirect object, but it can be done. For example, "Give the three of them the answer to question #7." In that sentence, "three" is the indirect object.
A direct or indirect object is a part of a sentence. A single word in isolation is neither a direct or indirect object. However, most nouns can be used in a sentence as either a direct or indirect object.
An indirect shows when something was done to something or someone.For example: He gave the book to me.The book is the direct object, me is the indirect object.
Any noun can function as an indirect object. A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Example sentence for the noun 'president' as indirect object: The minister brought the president some bad news. (the direct object is 'news', the indirect object is 'president')
A noun can be used in a sentence as the subject of the sentence or of a clause within the sentence, as the object or indirect object of a transitive verb or its present participle used as a gerund in the sentence, as the objective complement (or predicate nominative) of a linking verb or its gerund, as the object of a preposition, as the subject or object of an infinitive, as a nominative of address, as an appositive, or as a nominative absolute.
"Gerund" is a grammatical term for a verb that is used as a noun, for example in the sentence "I like running" in which case "running" is a gerund.
It might be, but you can't tell without seeing how it is used in the sentence. Us is an object, but it can be either an indirect object or a direct object, depending on context. For example, in "Tell us a story", us is an indirect object. But in "They robbed us", us is a direct object.
Yes, the verb "made" can be used in a sentence with an indirect object. For example, in the sentence "She made him a cake," "him" is the indirect object receiving the cake, while "a cake" is the direct object. This structure illustrates how "made" can convey the action of creating something for someone else.